The liberal women Supreme Court justices let the snark fly Monday as they picked apart the six-week abortion ban out of Texas.
Continue reading “Liberal Justices Can’t Help Showing Their Disdain For Texas Abortion Ban”Manchin’s Playing Everyone for Fools
We went into the weekend thinking Congress was finally on the verge of passing a substantially reduced Build Back Better bill, at roughly $1.75 trillion. Joe Manchin was likely more involved in that negotiation than any other member of Congress. He just held a press conference on the Hill in which he not only refused to support it but actually trashed the whole proposal in entirely new ways – now saying he can’t vote on any version of it until he learns more about what’s happening on inflation, gets a report from the CBO and other complaints. He demanded a vote on the so-called BIF and said he’s open to voting against the whole Biden reconciliation bill.
One other dimension to this is that Manchin’s announcement came just as Democratic leadership seemed on the verge on getting House progressives to believe that they had the outlines of a recon bill covered and thus vote for the BIF in advance of a recon bill. In other words, he was about to get what he has claimed to have wanted: passing the BIF bill before reconciliation and still having leverage to shape the reconciliation bill after the rest of the party has surrendered its leverage. The odds of that happening now seem close to nil.
Continue reading “Manchin’s Playing Everyone for Fools”Manchin Throws Weight At Reconciliation Talks With Vague Press Conference Citing Concerns
Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV) reminded everyone that his vote remains crucial for passing the reconciliation bill during a hastily arranged Monday press conference at the Capitol.
Continue reading “Manchin Throws Weight At Reconciliation Talks With Vague Press Conference Citing Concerns”TPM Reporter Matt Shuham: Six Books That Have Kept Me Busy During The Panini
We’re asking our fellow TPMers to share their own personal reading recommendations: books they love or that have shaped their lives.
Continue reading “TPM Reporter Matt Shuham: Six Books That Have Kept Me Busy During The Panini”Biden Publicly Apologizes For Trump’s Withdrawal From Paris Climate Agreement
President Biden offered an apology during the U.N. climate conference for former President Trump’s move to withdraw the U.S. from the Paris climate change agreement.
Continue reading “Biden Publicly Apologizes For Trump’s Withdrawal From Paris Climate Agreement”The Gathering Storm
There’s a new PRRI study looking at American identity and probably the big takeaway is how much anti-democratic beliefs and openness to political violence have taken root in the GOP. I’m going to list here some of the findings. These are ones that stand out to me. Definitely worth reviewing the whole thing.
62% of Republicans believe being born in America is something that makes you truly American. 43% for Democrats. 63% say being a Christian is something that makes you “truly American”; 35% for Democrats.
Continue reading “The Gathering Storm”LISTEN: Supreme Court Hears Challenges To Texas Abortion Law
The Supreme Court hears oral arguments by health providers and the Department of Justice challenging the Texas abortion law.
Watch below:
A Note on the Florida University Ban
Most discussions of Florida’s decision to forbid professors at state universities from serving as expert witnesses in cases challenging its voter suppression laws have focused on it as a question of free speech versus the state. And it is certainly that. In every legal sense it is that. It’s an almost comical abuse of power. But I want to highlight a distinction which may seem semantic but I think is more than that.
The danger is less the state than a certain type of political party, the Trumpite GOP.
Continue reading “A Note on the Florida University Ban”Florida University Blocks Professors From Testifying Against DeSantis’ Prized Voter-Suppression Law
A lot of things happened. Here are some of the things.
Champions Of The First Amendment
The University of Florida has barred three professors from testifying for plaintiffs against a law championed by Ron DeSantis that restricts mail-in voting, curtails drop box hours and limits who can provide food or water to those waiting in line to vote.
- DeSantis is very proud of this law. He even, bizarrely, signed it during an interview on Fox and Friends, a very on-brand bit of showmanship.
- In rejecting one of the professors’ requests, the dean of the university’s college of arts and sciences wrote that “outside activities that may pose a conflict of interest to the executive branch of the state of Florida create a conflict for the University of Florida,” according to The New York Times.
- “As UF is a state actor, litigation against the state is adverse to UF’s interests,” school officials said in documents reported by The Washington Post.
- The professors in question were three political scientists: Daniel A. Smith, Michael McDonald and Sharon Wright.
What Trump Doesn’t Want Us To See
A Saturday court filing by the Department of Justice details what documents Trump has asserted executive privilege over in a bid to hide them from the Jan. 6 committee.
- They include “daily presidential diaries, schedules, appointments showing White House visitors, activity logs, call logs, and switchboard shift-change checklists showing phone calls to the President and Vice President, all specifically for or encompassing January 6, 2021.”
- They include a host of other documents as well: drafts of public remarks related to Jan. 6, handwritten notes concerning Jan. 6, and, interestingly, “a draft proclamation honoring deceased Capitol Police officers Brian Sicknick and Howard Liebengood.”
- His request is broad, seeking to block about half of the 1,600 pages the National Archives identified as relevant to the Jan. 6 committee’s investigation, Politico notes.
Another Day, Another Damning Revelation About Eastman
As then-Vice President Mike Pence was locked down in the capitol, hiding from a mob that was calling for him to be hung, conservative legal scholar John Eastman emailed a screed to Pence’s legal counsel, denouncing the VP’s failure to toss the election results, according to a sprawling new report in the Washington Post.
- “Thanks to your bull—-, we are now under siege,” the Pence aide, Greg Jacob, had written in an angry email to Eastman.
- “The ‘siege’ is because YOU and your boss did not do what was necessary to allow this to be aired in a public way so that the American people can see for themselves what happened,” Eastman replied, referring to Trump’s false claims of voter fraud.
- Josh Marshall on this exchange: “In real time, Trump’s message was the same as Eastman’s. You brought it on yourself and they’re my guys. The way to lift the siege is to do the right thing and support the coup.”
- Even after the attack, Eastman kept up his efforts to push Pence to throw the election, arguing in an email to Jacob that the mob’s attack had caused debate to extend past the allotted two hours, invalidating the whole proceeding. The Post’s Aaron Blake examines that element of the story.
Kinzinger Speaks Out On His Retirement
Tomorrow Is Election Day
Both parties and the political press are obsessing over Virginia’s gubernatorial race.
- Polls show a very close race. McAuliffe has had an advantage for weeks, but FiveThirtyEight now puts Youngkin slightly in the lead.
- Jamelle Bouie: In Virginia’s Culture Wars, One Battle Has Already Been Lost
SCOTUS To Mull Abortion Ban That It Previously Found So Confusing
The Supreme Court will hear arguments today on Texas’ draconian abortion ban, looking specifically at its novel and dystopian enforcement mechanism.
- The Court declined to block the law in September. In an unsigned 5-4 order, the Court expressed confusion over what to do about the fact that everyone is meant to enforce the law, not the state itself.
- Since that September order, abortions have ceased in Texas almost entirely. On Saturday Kate Riga published a piece looking at the what the law has meant for abortion providers in adjacent states, who are confronted with their own states’ efforts to restrict abortion access.
- Brett Kavanaugh will get special attention from court watchers today, Adam Liptak writes.
This, Somehow, Keeps Happening
A Kansas twice state representative compared mask mandates and vaccine requirements to the holocaust during a Friday hearing, the Kansas City Star reports.
- “This is racism against the modern day Jew,” Rep. Brenda Landwehr of Wichita said during a hearing of the Legislature’s “Interim Committee on Government Overreach and COVID-19 Mandates.”
Not Great!
The Supreme Court said Friday it will consider a series of interrelated questions pertaining to the EPA’s ability to regulate carbon dioxide emissions.
- It’s a bit of a surprise that the court has taken up this set of petitions from red states and coal companies, E&E News notes.
- “This is the equivalent of an earthquake around the country for those who care deeply about the climate issue,” one environmental law professor, Harvard’s Richard Lazarus, told press.
- It would be extremely difficult for Biden to achieve his climate targets if Congress won’t place penalties on fossil fuels and the Court limits the executive branch’s ability to regulate climate change-causing pollutants.
- Biden, coincidentally, is headed to Scotland today to tout what his administration can do on climate change and push other world leaders to act.
Is This Week The Week?
We won’t be so presumptuous as to make any predictions there. But some senators — and the President — were sounding bullish over the weekend on the likelihood of a reconciliation package passing the Senate this week.
- “I believe we’ll see by the end of next week at home that is passed,” Biden said of the bill Sunday.
- Progressives are still waiting for Sens. Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema to say they support the legislation, or for Biden to warrant that they do.
- Manchin and progressives continued negotiations on drug pricing provisions through the weekend.
Pizza Story
Imagine that, instead of trying to pass some long sought-after legislation, the Democrats are trying to order a mushroom pizza. Alex Pareene does. The analogy is sort of revealing, and sort of works. Sort of.
- “Now the guy says he probably can only get us about half as much pizza as he said he could at first, and also he’s still not really sure when it’s going to arrive, because one of the guys on the Council of Pizza Guys is basically opposed to getting anyone pizza, period, and the rules of the Council of Pizza Guys are pretty complicated and they give each Pizza Guy a lot of power to delay pizza delivery or even just stop all pizzas from being made at all…” (You get the idea.)
Do you like Morning Memo? Let us know!
The Most Damning Jan 6th Revelation Yet
As I have noted in other recent posts, much of the recent ‘news’ about the insurrection has not been terribly new. It’s repackaged versions of things we knew or additional evidence and detail. This story published last night in the Post is one of the biggest revelations I’ve seen to date. John Eastman is the Federalist Society right wing law professor who wrote up the legal gloss for the President’s coup plot. It created the connective tissue joining the coup plot within the government with the paramilitary violence that broke out on Capitol Hill on January 6th.
The Post has emails – presumably emerging out of the committee investigation – of what happened during the insurrection. As the insurrectionists were storming the Capitol and Pence was holed up in a secure location as they hunted for him and members of Congress, Eastman emailed Pence and his top aide saying that the insurrection was Pence’s fault for not going through with the coup plot. With the President’s supporters ransacking the Capitol Eastman demanded Pence shift course and do the right thing.
Continue reading “The Most Damning Jan 6th Revelation Yet”